beowulf
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2003
- Messages
- 1,186
- Location
- Central California Foothills
- Tractor
- Kubota L3410 HST, J Deere riding mower
I need to put up about 700 feet of rather straight run temporary electric fence to fence cattle into an area where they won't be up to mischief at the location where daughter is building a home on our property. I know the basics of installing an electric fence and understand that the grounding aspect is perhaps the most important aspect to get right. Our ground is hard and rocky and very dry. It is recommended to install three 6' grounding rods 10' apart to achieve effective grounding. Not sure I can do that - but will try to put in three (galvanized steel) rods as deep as I can with the help of an auger bit and battery powered drills and water and sledge - I doubt I can get in more than 2-3 feet - will try to choose the best location for that. I have also read that if you have sub-optimal grounding conditions, you can use an "alternate wire system" - basically installing alternate hot and ground wires close enough together that the cattle will make contact with both wires at the same time and feel the shock. I suppose that is the system I will try - along with getting as much separate grounding with rods as I can.
So, any experience with the alternate wiring system? How well does it work? What do I need to know? Still needs separate grounding I assume.
Any suggestions to achieve optimal grounding in my hard dirt - dry and rocky area? I will try to keep the grounding rod area wet with some barrels of water and a drip system.
I thought about grounding it to the wellhead, but research said not to do that. I also thought I could additionally ground it to a stretch of barbed wire fence (at each end of the electric fence run) as that would make contact with the ground via a hundred of so T-posts, but I can't find much about that as an option.
Finally, I scored a whole lot of electric fence material when a fence guy was going out of business - almost free. Poly wire, 14 and 17 gauge galvanized wire, insulating connectors and much more. Just not the posts. So, a final question: poly wire vs galvanized wire? I have plenty of both.
Any help will be much appreciated.
So, any experience with the alternate wiring system? How well does it work? What do I need to know? Still needs separate grounding I assume.
Any suggestions to achieve optimal grounding in my hard dirt - dry and rocky area? I will try to keep the grounding rod area wet with some barrels of water and a drip system.
I thought about grounding it to the wellhead, but research said not to do that. I also thought I could additionally ground it to a stretch of barbed wire fence (at each end of the electric fence run) as that would make contact with the ground via a hundred of so T-posts, but I can't find much about that as an option.
Finally, I scored a whole lot of electric fence material when a fence guy was going out of business - almost free. Poly wire, 14 and 17 gauge galvanized wire, insulating connectors and much more. Just not the posts. So, a final question: poly wire vs galvanized wire? I have plenty of both.
Any help will be much appreciated.